Reconocimiento sin implementacion. Un balance sobre los derechos de los pueblos indigenas en America Latina
In: Revista mexicana de ciencias políticas y sociales, Band 60, Heft 224, S. 251-277
ISSN: 0185-1918
This article analyzes the status of the rights of indigenous peoples in Latin America, emphasizing the existing 'implementation gap', which allows for the differentiation between formal recognition of the international rights framework, and the lack of administrative and policy practices by Latin American states. Participation in decision making, together with land, territory and natural resources claims, has been one of the demands indigenous peoples have recently put more vehemently forth in the region. Governments' responses have usually been intimidation, repression, incarceration and assassination of indigenous persons. Such a scheme of conflicts and violation of rights exemplified by the case of Guatemalan indigenous peoples' mobilizations against mining in their country. Adapted from the source document.